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In writing the biography Ambler received helpful assistance from Doctor George B. Johnston, and Ann Mason Lee, both from Richmond, who were direct descendants of Floyd. [7] In the following thirty years Ambler was a member of the West Virginia University history department, and served as its chairman from 1929 until 1946. He created the West ...
Keasbey and Mattison became the dominant employer of the town of Ambler and had a major impact on it. Mattison built homes for the company's workers and executives. He founded a library and built an opera house, offices, shops, [2] and Trinity Memorial Episcopal Church. [7] [8] He owned the Ambler Water Co. and the Ambler Electric Light, Heat ...
Ambler was the second son of Humphry Ambler (~1681–1745) barrister of Stubbings Park Maidenhead [1] and Bream's Buildings Chancery Lane, and his wife Ann, daughter of Charles Bream (~1662–1713) timber merchant of Bridewell and Bream's Buildings. Charles's crippled (by a fall when aged eight) epileptic elder brother, Humphry, died of a ...
Mr. Blunt has corrected the errors of Ambler, by means of the Registrar's Book, and by comparing the Reports with contemparaneous manuscript reports, and thus has very much added to the reputation and authority of the work. Ambler's Reports embrace a period of forty years, and contain many of the decisions of those great Chancellors, Lords ...
Lindenwold Castle, also known as the Mattison Estate, is the former personal estate in Ambler, Pennsylvania, United States of asbestos magnate Richard Van Zeelust Mattison (1851–1935) of the Keasbey and Mattison Company. [1] [2] [3] It was designed by Milton Bean [4] [5] and built in 1890. [2]
Ambler is an English surname. [1] It may refer to: Alfred Ambler (1879–unknown), English footballer; Charles Ambler (1868–1952), English footballer; Charles Ambler (barrister) (1721–1794), English barrister and politician; Charles Henry Ambler (1876–1957), American historian and writer; David Ambler (born 1989), New Zealand sprinter
Ambler, a 40-year-old father of two, died on March 28, 2019. After a 20-minute vehicle chase that began when Ambler failed to dim his headlights to oncoming traffic, Johnson and Camden used Tasers ...
Mary Cary Ambler (1732 – May 1781) was an early American diarist. Her 1770 diary provides an early account of smallpox inoculation in colonial America. [1] [2] [3]Mary Cary was the daughter of Colonel Wilson Cary (1702-1772), owner of the plantation Ceelys on the James in Elizabeth City County, Virginia, and his wife Sarah (1710-1783).